You may have noticed that every computer filename ends with a period and three or four letters. Those letters actually have a purpose. They tell your computer how to open the file, ie. which application to use.

If you’re having trouble opening a file, sometimes it helps to know what app the file is looking for. I’ve included a quick list below. If I haven’t included an extension you’re curious about, simply enter that extension and the word extension ( .doc extension) into your favorite Internet search engine and you’ll most likely get your answer.

.doc Microsoft Word 2003 or earlier
.docx Microsoft Word 2007 or later
.xls Microsoft Excel 2003 or earlier
.xlsx Microsoft Excel 2007 or later
.ppt Microsoft PowerPoint 2003 or earlier
.pptx Microsoft PowerPoint 2007 or later
.pub Microsoft Publisher, any version
.pdf portable document file
(Adobe Acrobat Reader)
.htm or .html web page
.mpg movie
.mp3 music
.jpg or .jpeg image
.png image with transparent background
.gif animated or web image
.eps encapsulated PostScript vector image

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Tech Tuesday” is published every Tuesday. To reach Tracy with comments or questions, email her here.

This week, the PWOC International board is gathered together for Vision Week. Today, all of the Regional Presidents and Vice Presidents will join us, which means there are a lot of gals “out of the office” so to speak.

What happens when you go off the cyber-grid and can’t answer your email? Remember when you sent that email and immediately received a reply informing you of your recipient’s absence for a stated period of time? That was an “out of office” reply and is an available feature with all email providers.

For help setting up “Out of Office” replies in the various mail systems, open your preferred Internet search engine and enter the name of your mail provider (Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail, Outlook, etc.) along with the phrase, “out of office reply.”

And don’t forget to lift our PWOC leaders in prayer this week as we seek the face of Jesus and His direction for the ministry in the coming year.

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Tech Tuesday” is published every Tuesday. To reach Tracy with comments or questions, email her here.

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I’ve received a lot of questions lately about Microsoft Office files. Most of these questions point back to the same answer so I’m going to discuss it here today.

How do you know what type of file you have? Every computer filename has two parts separated by a period. The first part is the file’s name and it comes before the period. The second part, following the period, is the file extension. This file extension, usually 3-4 characters in length, will identify what type of file it is. For example, Microsoft Word files often end in .doc, whereas Excel and PowerPoint files end in .xls or .ppt respectively. These extensions tell your computer how to open the file, or which application to use to read the data it holds.

Did you catch that I said ‘often’ above in regards to the Word file extension? The reason I said ‘often’ is because the newest versions of the Microsoft Office suite have actually added an ‘x’ to its file extensions, both Windows and Mac versions. This is where the questions are generated.

If you try to open a Word file with the .docx extension using an earlier version of MS Word (2003),  you may run in to trouble. The same is true with the other office applications, as well. There is a way to resolve this problem, however, and it does not require an upgrade purchase!

Microsoft has created a Compatibility Pack available for free download on their site. This download will enable users to open these new files in older versions of Office with no trouble. Note: Some features of the new applications may be lost even when using the Compatibility Pack.

For those of you that blamed these troubles on the Windows/Mac conversion, that has nothing to do with it! So, if you’ve had trouble with these files and couldn’t figure out why, try the download and see if that takes care of it.

Click here to learn more about the Compatibility Pack and to find the download link.

Tech Tuesday” is published every Tuesday. To reach Tracy with comments or questions, email her here.

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